Upholstery cleaning isn't the same across the board, and what works perfectly on one sofa could actually ruin another. So whether you're still in the showroom comparing options or you already brought a piece home, knowing how each fabric behaves long term changes everything.
The most popular sofa fabrics each come with their own quirks, vulnerabilities, and care requirements. This guide breaks down what life with each fabric actually looks like and exactly how to keep it looking its best.
Linen is a popular choice in interior design, and it's easy to see why. It has that relaxed, organic texture that looks effortlessly elevated in almost any room. But here's what most furniture salespeople won't lead with: linen is one of the most demanding fabrics there is.
It wrinkles. It absorbs spills almost instantly. And if you try to spot clean it at home with water and a cloth, you risk a permanent water ring that ends up more visible than the original stain. Most linen upholstery carries a cleaning code of "S" (solvent only) or "S/W," meaning water based DIY cleaning can cause shrinkage, discoloration, and ring marks.
| How to Do It | How Often |
|---|---|
| Routine maintenance — Vacuum with an upholstery attachment to remove dust before it settles into the weave. | Weekly |
| Spill response — Blot immediately with a dry white cloth. Press down and lift. Never rub. Skip the water unless your tag explicitly says “W” or “S/W.” | As needed |
| Deep cleaning — Professional upholstery cleaning using solvent based methods appropriate to the fabric code. | Annually, or more often in high use rooms |
Best for: Low traffic spaces such as a reading chair, formal sitting room, or guest room sofa. For homes with young children or pets, linen demands more vigilance than most people anticipate. If you're wondering how to clean a linen sofa without ruining it, the honest answer is: carefully, and for anything beyond surface dust and a quick blot, professionally.
Performance fabrics have come a long way. Ten years ago, "performance" meant it looked like patio furniture. Today, brands such as Sunbrella, Crypton, and Revolution produce upholstery that's genuinely beautiful and engineered to take a beating. The protection works at the fiber level, not just through a surface coating. This is why a glass of red wine on a Crypton sofa beads up long enough for you to blot it away clean.
Surface wiping handles what you can see. Over time, allergens, fine particles, and embedded grime accumulate in the weave that routine cleaning doesn't reach. Annual professional deep cleaning extracts what daily maintenance misses, which matters especially for a fabric you invest in for the long haul.
Best for: Families with children and pets, high traffic living rooms, and anyone who wants low daily maintenance without sacrificing style.
Cotton velvet, polyester velvet, blended velvet. The depth of color, the way light catches the pile, the softness. It's a statement fabric. It's also one that requires real attention to maintain.
| The Appeal | The Reality |
|---|---|
| Deep, saturated color that looks stunning in any room | The pile crushes with repeated use, leaving visible wear patterns in high contact spots |
| Incredibly soft hand feel | Dust and pet hair settle into the nap and cling stubbornly |
| Statement piece presence | Water marks show clearly and are difficult to reverse once set |
Best for: Statement pieces in lower traffic areas. A bedroom chaise, an accent chair, a living room sofa in a low traffic adult household. As the primary family sofa in a busy household? A harder case to make.
Christopher's in Washington, D.C. specializes in fabric-specific upholstery cleaning, including velvet, linen, and leather. Request a quote.

Leather has a reputation for being the easy maintenance choice, and in some ways it is. Spills sit on the surface rather than absorbing immediately. Pet hair doesn't embed itself the way it does in woven fabrics. A damp cloth handles most everyday messes.
The problem is what people reach for when a damp cloth isn't enough.
Faux leather note: More forgiving on cleaning products, but the peeling that eventually happens with bonded leather or PU leather is a structural issue, not a care failure. If longevity matters, genuine leather is the stronger investment.
Best for: High traffic family rooms (genuine leather), pet households, and anyone who values durability and aging character over time.
Cotton is probably the most common upholstery fabric in American homes, which makes sense. It's soft, breathable, available in every color and pattern, and generally less expensive than specialty fabrics.
It's also the most vulnerable to staining, fading, and pilling over time. Cotton absorbs almost everything: coffee, wine, food, pet accidents. It all soaks in fast and sets quickly if not treated immediately.
Machine wash on cold. Air dry. Do not machine dry. Cotton slipcovers shrink in the dryer and may not fit back on the frame correctly. This is the one cotton upholstery scenario where home washing works well and works consistently.
Professional cleaning is the only safe deep clean method. Water based home cleaning on fixed cotton causes shrinkage and water rings because you can't control how deeply the moisture penetrates or how evenly it dries. DIY water based cleaning on fixed cotton is one of the more common causes of permanent fabric distortion.
For homes with children or pets: Consider cotton blends with a performance treatment (stain guard applied at the factory or added after purchase) over pure cotton. You get the comfort and breathability of cotton with meaningfully better stain resistance. Pure cotton in a high traffic family room is a maintenance commitment most households underestimate.
There's a tag somewhere on your sofa, usually tucked under a seat cushion or attached to the platform frame underneath. It has a letter code, and that single letter is the most important thing you can know before attempting any upholstery cleaning at home.
| Code | What It Means | Safe for DIY Water Cleaning? |
|---|---|---|
| W | Water based cleaning is safe. Use a water based cleaner or mild soap and water for spot treatment. | Yes |
| S | Solvent only. No water. Using water on an “S” coded fabric causes most DIY cleaning mistakes. | No |
| S/W | Either method is acceptable. You have the most flexibility with this code. | Yes |
| X | Vacuum only. No liquid of any kind. Professional cleaning required for anything beyond routine vacuuming. | No |
If your tag is missing or worn off, treat the fabric as "S" until you can confirm otherwise. It's the safer default. Using the wrong method on the wrong fabric is how most preventable upholstery damage happens.
For upholstery cleaning in Washington, D.C., Christopher's handles every fabric type and every cleaning code. Not sure the fabric type of your sofa? Bring us a photo or a cushion and we'll identify it and recommend the right care.
Our Upholstery Cleaning Service is known throughout the Washington, D.C., and Baltimore region for removing even the most stubborn soils while protecting the beauty and integrity of your treasured pieces.
For over 30 years, our discerning clients have chosen Christopher’s for one reason – expertise that delivers consistent results. With onsite convenience, we bring our professional Upholstery Cleaning Service directly to your home, office, restaurant, or venue across the District of Columbia, Northern Virginia, and Maryland suburbs.
📞 Schedule now: Call +1 (240) 684-8253, email genmgr@mychristophers.com, or use the form below to book your appointment.
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